One of the most visually arresting, what-in-the-world-is-happening athletic competitions is coming to the Minneapolis Convention Center as USA Gymnastics takes over downtown beginning June 21.
Trampoline gymnastics, which was added to the Olympics in 2000, is a hyperspecialized event that combines childhood abandon with rigorous discipline and the inherent danger that comes with sending your body soaring before attempting a springy, interlinked 10-skill routine of somersaults and twists.
The United States will send one man and one woman to represent the country in trampoline gymnastics at the Paris Games. The representatives, along with two alternates, will be announced June 26 in Minneapolis. Here’s what to look for as the gymnasts take to the air.
The trampoline
The dimensions of the trampoline are uniform for Olympic competition — 16 feet, 6 inches in length; 9 feet, 5 inches in width, and 3 feet, 9 inches in height. Red demarcation lines run along the long edge of the trampoline to show the exercise zone for the gymnast.
Landing outside of that zone impacts scoring, and the goal is to stay as close to the red plus sign at the center as possible.
But while gymnasts can prepare for the parameters, they cannot prepare for the unique relationship they’ll have with a specific trampoline until they step onto it.
“We train on all different trampolines so we never get comfortable,” said Nicole Ahsinger, who represented the U.S. and finished sixth in women’s trampoline at the Tokyo Games in 2021. “We’re always a little uncomfortable so when you go to a competition and you’re on this brand-new trampoline, no matter if it feels bouncy or tight or it pulls a little bit to the right or the left, no matter what it is, we will always feel comfortable in knowing we will be able to hit a routine.”
Some skills are meant to move the body from side to side or utilize an unusual angle to showcase a particular movement. But often, the gymnast is responding to the tensile nylon of the trampoline bed in real time, and their ability to adjust and stay calm is built through years of working with different trampolines.